For more than a year, The Globe and Mail’s Underexposed photojournalism series has spotlighted Canada’s underrepresented people and places, celebrating our country’s diversity from coast to coast to coast.
Across 25 visual stories, photojournalists have brought readers into New Brunswick’s thriving punk scene and Canada’s military operations in a changing Arctic, and introduced them to the people living through B.C.’s overdose crisis, the Inuit bringing a traditional seal meat to the heart of Ottawa and the star-gazers who flock to the Prairies each year.
Our aim has been to remind Canadians of our strengths and the beauty of community, and readers have responded with intrigue, gratitude and delight.
Check out the photographers’ favourite photos from their Underexposed series
We’re happy to announce that the Underexposed series is entering its second year. Now, for this new edition, we want to hear which communities you want the series to turn its lens on next.
Is there a special group or place you think every person in Canada should know about? Are you part of an emerging community or a new generation reimagining their heritage? Or is there a place – at home or abroad – where Canadians are bringing new meaning to our national identity?
Send us your ideas in the form below, or by e-mailing audience@globeandmail.com with “Underexposed” in the subject line. We can’t wait to hear your ideas.
Tell us which stories Underexposed should cover next
As our photojournalism series begins its second year, we want to hear which underrepresented communities you’d like to see in the spotlight. Is there a unique place, group or person you think every Canadian should know about? Send us your ideas in the form below or by e-mailing
audience@globeandmail.com with “Underexposed” in the subject line.